jeudi 7 novembre 2013

Tampa Bay Lightning answering the Atlantic Division challenge

Getty Images It seems as if the Tampa Bay Lightning's victory over the St. Louis Blues last Saturday was the moment their early season surge finally reached eyes beyond the city limits. Taking their two points and heading into a four-day break, the Lightning currently sit atop the Atlantic Division with a 10-4-0 record as they host the Edmonton Oilers Thursday night.


Out of the safety net that was the Southeast Division and dropped into one with the likes of the Boston Bruins, Detroit Red Wings and Ottawa Senators, the Lightning have held their own, especially against the Western Conference going 5-0-0, including two wins over the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks.


“Are we the perfect hockey team?,” head coach Jon Cooper asked after beating the Blues. “Not even close, but are we a team that responds to challenges? They do.”


There’s the challenge of a newer, tougher division. The challenge of going to battle with two unproven netminders (more on that in a bit). And then there’s been the challenge of coming from behind, which has seen Tampa win two of the five games that they trailed entering the third period.


Cooper had a 16-game evaluation period at the end of last season after Guy Boucher was fired. The man who has won at every level he’s coached at – AHL, USHL, NAHL – has been given an assist from the Lightning's organizational cupboard. Eight players who were on the ice celebrating the Calder Cup trophy in 2012 with him have played for the NHL club this season. Finding success in this league without developing your own talent is incredibly tough to do.


The man who had four assists in Game 4 that June night for the Norfolk Admirals is no longer with the Lightning, but is tied to their current success.


Playing on a line with Steven Stamkos and Martin St. Louis at the beginning of the 2013 season, Cory Conacher was drawing plenty of Calder Trophy buzz. He then cooled off a bit and general manager Steve Yzerman cashed in his chip to try and improve a need that was struggling: goaltending.


The Anders Lindback experiment wasn’t working as planned, so Yzerman flipped Conacher and a fourth-round pick for Ottawa Senators netminder Ben Bishop. Much like the Lindback signing, the move was another gamble. The 6-foot-7 Bishop had only played in 36 NHL games to that point, but this season he's become the team's MVP.


Through 11 starts, Bishop, who's signed through next season, is 10th in the NHL in save-percentage (.925), eighth in goals against average (2.25) and sports a .927 even-strength save percentage. He's grabbed the reigns of the starting position and run with his first crack at winning a No. 1 job in the league.


Stamkos and St. Louis are doing their usual thing, leading the team in scoring, but free agent signing Valtteri Filppula has provided some of the secondary scoring with five goals and 11 points. Teddy Purcell (9 points) and second year man Alex Killorn (12 points), who's on pace to blow past his rookie season total of 19 points, have also helped. The power play (21.4 percent) and penalty kill (85.4 percent) are both seventh in NHL.


Things are clicking early, but as every team experiences over an 82-game schedule, those valleys await. One such could be coming soon.


After the lowly Oilers visit Thursday night, the Lightning play seven of their following eight games away from home -- including a west coast swing and three divisional games -- against teams with a combined 68-31-11 record


For Cooper and his men, it's one more challenge. How will they respond?


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Sean Leahy is the associate editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Happy Hour: Your reactions to Fox Sports 1 and more

(Getty Images)


Throughout the week you can send us your best questions, jokes, rants and just plain miscellaneous thoughts to happyhourmailbag@yahoo.com or @NickBromberg. We'll post them here, have a good time and everyone's happy. Right? Oh who are we kidding, this is NASCAR. No one is ever happy.


Last week I posed the question about why people were so unhappy with the transition from Speed to Fox Sports 1. And y'all responded. Thanks for that. This week's mailbag will primarily focus on that, as there was some good reaction. Let's get started.


If you can not agree that FS1 is a major face change from SPEED you must not be watching on Fridays, SPEED was all about racing, granted the stupid reality stuff with Rutt and Kyle and Kenny was utter nonsense, but it focused primarily on racing and cars. FS1 is about competing with ESPN, I do not care about soccer or the British commentators. It is just weird to hear the accent describing NASCAR, and it is just wrong. The race day coverage is still using that cheating Waltrip, who needs to listen to that fool. The commercials are relentless, the same stupid tired rerun that never changes. The racing commercials like Home Depot, or Subway are few an far between because the major sponsors are bailing out at an alarming rate, it's all about the chase, and the sponsors know if they are not in, NO COVERAGE, the package will change for only the first 26 shows, then nothing. If the 24 wins the CUP after being given a spot, you will see the biggest revolt that ever happened in NASCAR, THE FANS ARE TIRED OF THE MANIPULATION OF THE RACES. When folks go to the short track instead of the CUP race, it's says it all. Again, if you do not see and feel a difference, you are in the wrong business!

- Jim


First off, I never said that it wasn't a big change, and stop with the British nonsense. You mentioned a key point when you said "utter nonsense." The key parts of NASCAR programming has been kept on television (again, with the exception of Wind Tunnel and SpeedCenter). Many of the other non-live event programming that was on Speed was superfluous.


Racing commercials being on a racing network but not an all-sports network shouldn't be that hard to figure out. And Jim, you don't have to worry about Jeff Gordon any longer.


_____________________


I can put up with Fox 1 but what really frosts me is that Fox 2 has usurped so much of the action programming. Dish Network has split the two Foxes and will only provide me with Fox 2 if I buy an expensive addition to my existing coverage package. Don't tell me that NNS qualifying was never televised - that's bunk - and of the two practice sessions on Saturday, at least one was televised by Speed. Since Dish brags about their viewership, how many fans are being shut out or shaken down? If nothing else this, coupled with the boring racing, is having the effect of weaning me from NASCAR.

- Carol


Carol, sorry, but you're caught in the middle of a nice carrier and company dispute. If you're in Fox's shoes, wouldn't you be putting programming that people want to watch on your No. 2 channel in the hopes that someone would move it to a stronger tier? You would.


If you're the cable company, would you not want to be strong-armed into paying a higher rate for the unproven No. 2 channel all while hoping that you could recoup more money from the people that need to upgrade to a higher tier to watch it?


I'm not picking sides, I just hope people realize all of this. And also that in 2013, sports programming and cable television isn't free, though I do think it's absurd that a channel like NBC Sports Network wasn't on my family's Dish satellite tier package when I went to watch the F1 race Sunday morning while in Texas.


Most of my television programming is sports related, and I realize that on my bill accordingly. It's about the tradeoff. More to come after this next one...


_____________________


Here is why many people don't like the change from Speed to FoxSports 1. We already have ESPN, and ESPN2, and 10 other sports channels, which mostly focus on football, basketball, and baseball. Speed was about cars, racing, motorcross, monstertrucks, boats, ATV's and such. That was the appeal to that channel. If you wanted other sports, tune in somewhere else. Now FS1 takes over, and it's a channel that at best runs 20% motorsports programs. The rest is just a copy of ESPN, with some MMA mixed in.


I still watch it, but I don't sing praises about the change. The other fun feature is if you want to get a little more race coverage, switch over to FS2, except you have to upgrade your dish/cable package to get it for another $20 per month. No thanks. I miss Speed.

- Carl


Speed was once in a very small position and had to grow their audience and distribution incrementally. This is not something that's a new phenomenon for FS2. And if memory serves me correctly, for Directv subscribers, Speed was on the current package that Fox Sports 2 is now. It's a process, and while a la carte pricing may be closer than ever, it's still a long way away.


_____________________


Why? indeed!

How about, SpeedTV was about motor sports.

Now, we have a channel that is about all kinds of sports.

They feel compelled to compete with ESPN, ESPN2, ComcastSports, NHL Network, NFL Network, NBCSports, local sports channels, etc.

So Fox 1 covers Baseball, Football, etc.


I turn on SpeedTV and can see any number of different motor sports.

Now, I get three hours of post RedSox World Series victory coverage. (And I'm a SoxNation sports fan!)

I want motor sports coverage. Everything else is just a game...I have dozens of channels here in Boston to get coverage of silly games...


Where's my SpeedTV?

- Greg


Yes the racing coverage is still there but most of the other programs are gone. Two Guys Garage, My Classic Car, and pretty much anything but the race coverage. But the worst is all the promos about other sports shows and commercials unrelated to cars and racing, etc.


SPEED channel was about cars and racing – it was aimed at us gearheads and we miss it. I don’t want to hear about football and the other stick and ball sports. FS1 is trying to be ESPN – God help us and save us from that crap.

- Larry


I know this isn't a popular around these parts, but does anyone who is mad about the change want to give credence to the idea that there wasn't an audience for a motorsports-only channel any longer? Or should I say the widespread audience for a motorsports channel? We saw the direction that Speed was going with more and more NASCAR-centric racing programming and ridiculous shows like Pinks and the like. Other racing series were hardly mentioned, and if the two news shows that we mentioned above were drawing audiences that were sustainable in the eyes of executives, they wouldn't have disappeared.


Change is hard. I realize that. But there's nothing that can be done, and there will not be a motorsports channel anytime soon. Your best bet for that is NBC Sports Network in 2015. A bunch of racing and soccer? That's a perfect channel in my eyes, and no, I'm not just saying that because of our alliance.


_____________________


I was reading the debate about caution laps not being counted so I'll put my 2 cents worth in. Don't count caution laps in the last 10 laps.

- Mary


I'd be good with this, and I'd also be good with the idea that the race isn't over if a caution comes out on the last lap. It would also help eliminate those stinking fuel mileage races that so many people seem to dislike.


_____________________


Harvick- Pot calling the kettle black. Since the arrival of Jeff Gordon, all the drivers have been spoiled little rich kids. Harvick is a very good driver, but he would never have had the opportunity to develop his skills if he had not been a rich kid.

- John


Harvick's father was a firefighter and local racer. That's a far cry from the empire that is RCR.


_____________________


NASCAR is not stock car racing and it shouldn’t be. You had a letter that a gentleman wanted stock car racing, try going to your local track. About 8 years ago when I lived in Ocala, Florida, I went to the weekend races at the local track. They had five races: 4 cylinders – usually won by Mustangs and a couple Toyota pickups, 6 cylinders – a Buick Skylark and a Nissan Maxima seem unbeatable, 8 cylinder – various winners, Modified – most could not tell what the original car was, and finally sprint car – offset tires, roll cage with sheet metal and bore out motor. It was a blast every time, but of little or no interest to anyone outside the local community. Drivers attracted family and friends. Beer, burgers, and bonfires followed the race on those hot Florida summer nights.

NASCAR tried going back to its root with the IROC series. Matched cars that were shuffled between drivers so no one had an advantage and it died on the vine in the 90s. NASCAR is about top teams using top equipment for top results, period. That is what true NASCAR fans live for. I feel that NASCAR has already address most of the issue with the Truck Series, Nationwide and the Sprint Cup. If you want more look into ISMA and Road Rally.

- Kenn


Kenn nails it. If there was enough of an audience for true "stock" racing, it'd be around. Heck, try watching the V8 Supercars.


_____________________


hello i am writing to find out where i can buy the jimmie johnson car ??

- Charlene


You have come to the wrong place, Charlene. Try Hendrick Motorsports. Though I'm not sure they're looking to sell any of Jimmie's cars or if you could afford one.


Thanks everyone! We'll see you next week.






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Texas Rangers locked up young pitcher Martin Perez until 2020, potentially

(USA Today) The hot stove got you itching for baseball news? Free agency started Monday and not much has happened yet (that's usually how it goes, kids, sorry).


But here's some super exciting contract news. Drumroll, please. The Texas Rangers have agreed to a new four-year contract with ... Martin Perez. Yes, the 22-year-old left-handed pitcher who went 10-6 with a 3.62 ERA in his first full season.


Perez got the most attention this year when he started Game 163 for the Rangers against the Tampa Bay Rays. The Rangers lost the tiebreaker game and Perez gave up three runs in 5 1/3 innings. He did, however, go 5-0 in August with a 3.06 ERA and a 1.13 WHIP. He was the third-rated prospect in the Rangers organization according to Baseball America heading into this season.


We jest above, obviously, about this being super exciting news. But it is a smart deal for Texas. Particularly because of the three option years, which would potentially keep Perez in a Rangers uniform until 2020. The new deal skips what would have been arbitration years in 2015 and 2016.


This isn't the kind of move that gets fans in Arlington excited for a brighter 2014 (the kind that doesn't involve a tiebreaker game, for instance). But it it the kind of deal that could seem brilliant in three years.


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Mike Oz is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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5 facts about the Phoenix Suns’ massive new ‘Gorilla Gatling Gun’ T-shirt cannon

Here's hoping the Gorilla has a license for that thing. (Photo via @paulcoro)


As soon as Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic tweeted about it before the Phoenix Suns' season opener last week, I wanted to know more about the new "Gorilla Gatling Gun" that the team unveiled to, apparently, give the team's famed mascot the upper hand in any wars he might wage with the fans who attend games at the U.S. Airways Center this season. So I asked. Because journalism.


After running it past the military intelligence community to determine that nothing in the communique would prove deleterious to our national security, the fine folks in the Suns' media relations department provided some specs about the massive new T-shirt launcher and in-game entertainment attraction. Without further ado:


1. It can shoot 60 T-shirts or 120 mini-basketballs in less than 10 seconds.


Carry the one ... um, that means it shoots 600 T-shirts or 720 mini-balls in a minute. That is a punishing amount of team spirit. "Hell yeah, I love the Suns. I have the welts on my chest to prove it. Eff your Thunder Dan shirsey."


2. It is powered by 80 pounds of carbon dioxide.


That's 0.46 Ish Smiths worth of pure compressed gas, devoted specifically at rocketing swag toward your skull at a rate of speed and force that will have you thinking twice about paying attention to anything besides what's happening on the court during a timeout. Does your buddy want to get up and grab a beer while there's a break in the action? Let him run that risk. You keep your eyes on the Gorilla Gun and stay safe. (And ask him to grab you one while he's up.)


3. It weighs 650 pounds.


"Two full Oliver Millers of rafter-reaching, stands-exploding excitement." You can have that promotional slogan for free, Suns.


4. It stands over 9 feet tall.


That is a very tall gun. That is roughly 1 1/2 Eric Bledsoes tall, which, frankly, seems excessive. (Then again, I am not a merchandise general.)


Suns centers Alex Len, Slava Kravtsov and Channing Frye all have a long enough standing reach to comfortably put their hands in the very top of barrel of the Gorilla Gun. They should 100 percent not do this, because the rotation of the Gatling gun's barrels could result in some nasty cranking on their wrist and elbow joints, and also because all that compressed CO2 behind the T-shirts and mini-basketballs would blow their hands clean off, which would make it difficult for them to provide capable play behind Miles Plumlee (whose standing reach was measured at 8 feet, 9 1/2 inches, which is lucky for him).


5. It is the "biggest capacity T-shirt gun in the world … as far as we know."


Those facts and figures certainly seem to outstrip the specs on "Big Bella," the similarly styled T-shirt launcher debuted last season by the Philadelphia 76ers. That advanced poly-cotton-blend blaster "fires 100 tees in just 60 seconds" and "weighs 600 pounds," which was pretty impressive last year, I guess, but now seems like ... how do I put this delicately? ... a quaint old-fashioned little squirt gun for babies.


First Big Bella, now the Gorilla Gun ... I fear that we may now be on the brink of an in-arena entertainment arms race that will lead somewhere dark, like the BrooklyKnight and Pierre the Pelican taking inflatable mascot dances and turning them into something sinister more akin to a "Pacific Rim"-style battle that reduces an NBA stadium to rubble. If (when, really) this dystopian future comes to pass, we're going to need a calm, soothing, peace-promoting voice to help convince us to beat our T-shirt-launching monstrosities into plowshares ... and I think I know just the guy:


Let's lay down our gatling guns and embrace Pausitivity, friends ... before it's too late.


Many thanks to the Suns' media relations team for being kind enough to help out and play along.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!


Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow BDL's Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






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Connecticut Lottery unveils Hartford Whalers scratch-off tickets (Puck Treasures)

Puck Treasures looks to find those hidden hockey treasures from the past and present, and gives them their proper remembrance. Seen an interesting piece of hockey apparel? Send us an email at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com.


CTBoom.com


It's been 16 long years since the Hartford Whalers graced our presence as an NHL team, but the love for them has not ceased. Merchandise sales still continue make cash registers ring and you can't involve yourself in a conversation about the Whale without "Brass Bonanza" being hummed.


There's been a hope that the NHL will once again return to Hartford, but those dreams remain very, very slim. In the meantime, the Connecticut Lottery is getting in on the Whale game by creating scratch-off tickets featuring the team's glorious logo.


According to CT Boom, the tickets will be available beginning next Tuesday and cost $3, which is also the minimum prize you can win. Back in 1992 the Connecticut Lottery did something similar with the winnings ranging from $2-$1,000.


The grand prize is $30,000 (What, no Geoff Sanderson signed jersey?), which would probably be better served going toward vintage Whalers merchandise than a comeback fund.


Until then, we can continue to dream about hearing "Brass Bonanza" on a regular basis again.


Stick-tap Charles J.


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Sean Leahy is the associate editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Ducks have unfinished business; Duchene’s big year; Glencross out six weeks (Puck Headlines)

Here are your Puck Headlines: a glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.


Getty Images


Derek Stepan and Mats Zuccarello celebrate as young Penguins fan yearns to engage in his own hockey hug.


• What's been the reason behind the Ducks' early season success? "Unfinished business" after a disappointing playoff exit last season. [ESPN]


• Nick Cotsonika on Brendan Shanahan's journey to the Hockey Hall of Fame. [Yahoo]


• Former NHLer Jody Shelley on fighting: "I wouldn't have even been on a roster. I wouldn't have made my major junior team. Not a chance. My career would've ended my first training camp with the Halifax Mooseheads in Campbellton, New Brunswick. Thanks for coming." [CP via Yahoo]


• The step Matt Duchene has taken this year in his development can be defined as "enormous." [THN]


• Rick DiPietro is getting back into the swing of things with the Charlotte Checkers of the AHL and should another injury arise in the Hurricanes' net, he'll be on the fast-track back to the NHL. [NHL.com]


• Johan Franzen has missed five of six games for the Red Wings and is expected to miss Saturday's game as well. But Detroit believes he should return to the lineup on Tuesday. [MLive]


• Tim Thomas might return to the Panthers this weekend, so he won't play tonight against his old pals in the Bruins at TD Garden. Despite skating with the team this morning, Thomas declined to speak to the media. Wonder why? [CSNNE]


• Taylor Hall is back in the Oilers' lineup tonight as they visit the Lightning. He's missed the past seven games with a knee injury. [Oilers]


• The Flames will be without Curtis Glencross for six weeks after he suffered a sprained MCL against the Wild on Tuesday. [Calgary Sun]


• After missing five games with an upper-body injury, Hurricanes head coach Kirk Muller said that Jeff Skinner would be out for at least another two weeks. [News Observer]


• Trying to figure out exactly why the Metropolitan Division has taken over from the Southeast as the worst division in the NHL. [Grantland]


• How would life be different if Ray Shero had drafted Jonathan Toews instead of Jordan Staal in 2006? [Get to Our Game]


• Bourne on the slumping Claude Giroux. [Backhand Shelf]


• More Giroux on his teammates belief things can turn around: "Maybe they believe it, but they don't believe it 100 percent. I really believe that when we start believing that we're a good team, that's when we're going to start winning games. We're not convinced that we are right now."[Philly.com]


• It's a vital point in the season for the Panthers and as GM Dale Tallon contemplates changes, difficult decisions must be made. [Panther Parkway]


• Pretty devastating knockout punch by Brandon Braddock of the Edmonton Oil Kings. [Buzzing the Net]


• A forgotten Jason Arnott memory: NHL 98. [The Sportsfan Journal]


• If your dream in life is to become an NHL general manager, you better hope it's with a U.S.-based team because then you'd have sweet, sweet job security. [On Goal Analysis]


• Which player is worth having on your fantasy hockey team? Kyle Okposo or Bryan Little? [Dobber Hockey]


• Good on David Backes for donating $24,000 toward the purchase hockey equipment for the Mankato Hockey Association's Try Hockey For Free event. [Mankato Free Press]


• Finally, here's a top 10 list of plays from this year's Hockey Hall of Fame class:






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Diminutive prep athlete pulls quadruple duty on the fields of Columbine

Keep this in mind: Michael Tait is 5-foot-9 and 155 pounds.


Michael Tait excels at four sports for Colorado's Columbine High -- Karl Gehring/The Denver Post Michael Tait excels at four sports for Colorado's Columbine High -- Karl Gehring/The Denver Post


Most high school kids his size might be happy just making a varsity roster, but not Tait. The Columbine High (Littleton, Colo.) junior is a four-sport star. Yup. A junior. Playing four varsity sports. His story is chronicled wonderfully in a recent Denver Post feature.


This fall, Tait shares quarterbacking duties with teammate Tyler Goodwin on the football team in addition to performing as the golf squad's No. 1 player. He's also expected to start on the basketball team this winter after serving as a sixth man last season. Oh, and he started in center field on the baseball team this past spring. Not bad for a year's work.


"Most people don't know walking 18 holes and playing in a tournament is just as tiring as going to football practice," Tait told Denver Post prep guru Neil Devlin. "I have long days. And school's getting hard." Not that he's struggling. Tait reportedly owns a 3.96 GPA.


In other words, Tait excels at everything he does. He's quarterbacking a 3-0 football team, fired a 3-under 69 on the golf course earlier this spring, filled up the stat sheet for a hoops squad that made the playoffs last winter and batted .273 as a sophomore. Not bad.


And it's not as if Tait's facing weak competition. He's performing in Colorado's largest classification (5A) and has a good chance to make the state tournament in each sport.


While prep sports are becoming more and more specialized and scholarships become more and more valuable, severely limiting the number of two-sport athletes (as Devlin notes), Tait is standing tall in four. Even if he's 5-foot-nothing, 100-and-nothing.


His story is an inspiring one, especially at Columbine, where two infamous students once tried to destroy the innocence of the high school experience that Tait embodies.


Want more on the best stories in high school sports? Connect with Prep Rally on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.






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